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Miami Vice

Miami Vice (en España: Corrupción en Miami; en Hispanoamérica: División Miami, Vicio en Miami o Miami, Policía Especial) es una serie...

The Man from U.N.C.L.E



The Agent of C.I.P.O.L. It was an American television series broadcast by the NBC network from September 1964 to January 1968. The original title in English was The Man from U.N.C.L.E., which in Spanish would be El Hombre del T.Í.O. Originally co-creator Sam Rolfe wanted to drop the meaning of U.N.C.L.E. (T.Í.O.) ambiguous, so it could refer to Uncle Sam (Uncle Sam) or United Nations (United Nations). Concerns by the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer legal department about the use of U.N. (U.N.U.) for commercial purposes led to the clarification of the producers that U.N.C.L.E. (T.Í.O.) was an acronym for United Network Command for Law and Enforcement. 

Interestingly, each episode featured a panoramic aerial image of the UN building in New York in the presentation. Which, at least, implies the cosmopolitan aspect of the CIPOL organization, perhaps as suggesting a model of brotherly globalization of cooperation, a certain parallel with the UN, as a pioneering institution and organization of global cooperation. The series was created by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and 105 episodes were made. 

The first season was broadcast in the United States in 1964 in black and white. The series was about two spies belonging to an international organization: the American Napoleon Solo (Robert Vaughn) and the Georgian (Georgia-USSR) Illya Kuryakin (David McCallum). Actor Leo G. Carroll played Alexander Waverly, a Briton who was in charge of C.I.P.O.L. Ian Fleming, the creator of James Bond, contributed to the conception of the series. The book The James Bond Films indicates that his idea was based on two characters: Napoleon Solo and April Dancer (The Girl from C.I.P.O.L.). Mr. Solo was the name that the crime boss originally had in Fleming Goldfinger's novel. Robert Towne and Harlan Ellison wrote the scripts for the series, which was originally to be called Solo. Author Michael Avallone, who wrote the first original novel about the series, is often incorrectly cited as the creator of the series.

Napoleon Solo was originally planned to be the only protagonist of the series, the only "agent". A scene with Illya Kuryakin made him very popular in the audience and convinced the producers that the lead agents should be both. Plot The series was about an International Secret Agency. The acronym of the original title in English meant United Network Command for Law and Enforcement, in Latin America it was said that C.I.P.O.L. stood for International Commission for the Enforcement of the Law. This secret agency maintained a constant fight with an evil organization THRUSH (originally called WASP in the pilot chapter of the series). In the series the meaning of THRUSH was never explained, but in many of the novels about C.I.P.O.L./U.N.C.L.E. written by David McDaniel, it is indicated to mean Technological Hierarchy for the Removal of Undesirables and the Subjugation of Humanity. (Technological Hierarchy for the Elimination of the Undesirables and the Subjugation of Humanity.) THRUSH's goal was to conquer the world.

 In this regard, the character of Napoleon only said "THRUSH I believe in a system with two parts: the masters and the slaves. So dangerous was the organization in the series that it managed to get ideologically antagonistic governments such as those of the United States and the USSR to unite in the CIPOL's formation CIPOL's headquarters was in New York City and generally the agents accessed it through a secret passage located in the "Del Floria" Tailor's shop, another entrance was through the "The Masque" club. World head of the organization, Mr. Waverly had his own entrance.



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